Shanghai Daily

Vettel’s departure from Ferrari could also be a farewell to F1

- MOTOR RACING

SEBASTIAN Vettel’s dream of emulating Michael Schumacher in winning multiple Formula One titles with Ferrari finally ended yesterday.

It would be no big surprise if the fourtime world champion ultimately walks away from the sport entirely at the end of a COVID-19-hit 2020 season without adding to his championsh­ip tally.

The 32-year-old German, who won his drivers’ crowns with Red Bull from 201013, hinted at that possibilit­y in a Ferrari statement announcing his departure after five years at Maranello.

Schumacher won five of his record seven titles with the Italian team but those days are gone and Vettel, one of the highest-paid drivers, has so far only 14 race wins for Ferrari to his credit.

The new coronaviru­s crisis has also changed the sporting and financial landscape.

“What’s been happening in these past few months has led many of us to reflect on what are our real priorities in life,” said Vettel, who has been isolating at home in Switzerlan­d while Italy was in lockdown.

“One needs to use one’s imaginatio­n and to adopt a new approach to a situation that has changed. I myself will take the time I need to reflect on what really matters when it comes to my future,” added the father of three.

Vettel had been in talks about a contract extension and his chances of securing another drive in a winning car now appear limited.

Champion Mercedes and Red Bull are the only teams other than Ferrari to have won races since the 1.6-liter V6 turbo hybrid era started in 2014, and the rules are staying the same until 2022.

While Mercedes’ six-time world champion Lewis Hamilton has been linked to Ferrari, his recent comments have indicated he intends to remain with the dominant team of the past six seasons.

Hamilton gets on well with Finnish teammate Valtteri Bottas, and Mercedes also has younger and cheaper long-term talents in its driver pipeline in the shape of Britain’s George Russell and Frenchman Esteban Ocon.

Red Bull has shown no desire to take Vettel back, with 22-year-old Dutch driver Max Verstappen its main focus now alongside British-born Thai youngster Alexander Albon.

“It’s difficult to see how two alphas can fit in a team. You can see the problem that Ferrari have had. Why would it be any different at Red Bull with two alpha drivers?” team boss Christian Horner said last year.

Vettel and his Monegasque teammate Charles Leclerc fought for supremacy inside Ferrari last year, with the 22-year-old getting the upper hand against an uneasy champion used to being top dog.

Ferrari clearly sees Leclerc, who has a long-term contract and is fast becoming one of the sport’s most popular drivers, as their future.

Spaniard Carlos Sainz, McLaren’s 25-year-old driver, has already been installed as a frontrunne­r to join him with Renault’s Australian Daniel Ricciardo also in contention.

Ricciardo, 30, is a race winner of Italian ancestry and would be a popular choice.

McLaren, which last won a race in 2012 but was fourth last season, will be switching from Renault to Mercedes engines in 2021 and could be interested in Ricciardo as a replacemen­t for Sainz if the Spaniard gets the nod.

Renault, touted by some as Vettel’s most likely option, is in full cost-cutting mode as the manufactur­er faces slumping car sales as a result of the pandemic.

(Reuters)

 ??  ?? Ferrari’s German driver Sebastian Vettel is seen during Formula One preseason testing at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya in Barcelona, Spain, in this February 21, 2020, photo. Vettel will leave the Italian team at the end of the season. — Reuters
Ferrari’s German driver Sebastian Vettel is seen during Formula One preseason testing at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya in Barcelona, Spain, in this February 21, 2020, photo. Vettel will leave the Italian team at the end of the season. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China